
Last modified: 2021-05-16 by ivan sache
Keywords: cuéllar | arroyo de cuéllar | chatún | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
Flag of Cuéllar - Image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
See also:
The municipality of Cuéllar (9,861 inhabitants in 2009; 34,866 ha; municipal website) is located in the north-west of the Province of Segovia, half distance (50 km) from Segovia and Valladolid. The municipality is made of the town of Cuéllar and of the villages of Arroyo de Cuéllar (373 inh.), Campo de Cuéllar (211 inh.), Chatún (248 inh.), Dehesa Mayor (105 inh.), Dehesa de Cuéllar (28 inh.), Escarabajosa de Cuéllar (70 inh.), Fuentes de Cuéllar (43 inh.), Lovingos (80 inh.), and Torregutiérrez (107 inh.).
Cuéllar developed on a site already settled in the Ages of Bronze and  
Iron (necropolis). Some historians claim that the fortified town was  
conquered by the Romans, who renamed it Colenda; accordingly, the  
etymology of Cuéllar would refer to collis, "a hill" or "a hilly  
area". There is no more historical evidence on the town until 940,  
when the area was resettled by the Counts of Monzón after the Battle  
of Simancas and the withdrawal of the Moors from the region. In 997,  
Almanzor took the town and sent its inhabitants to Andalusia. The town  
was eventually re-conquered at the end of the 11th century by King  
Alfonso VI, who set up the Community of the Town and Land of Cuéllar.
In 1256 King Alfonso X the Wise granted the town a Royal fair and  
privileges; the town became the most significant settlement in the  
Duero plain, mostly living from the trade of cloth. Several episodes  
involving the kings of Castile took place in Cuéllar: in 1297, Queen  
María de Molina, widow of Sancho IV, conveyed there the Court, who  
took the party of her son, the future King Ferdinand IV; in the middle  
of the 14th century, Peter I married Juana de Castro in Cuéllar; a few  
years later Queen Leonor, John I's wife, died in Cuéllar. When crowned  
in 1464, Henry IV conveyed the Court in Cuéllar and transferred the  
town to Beltrán de la Cueva, the first Duke of Alburquerque. Cuéllar  
was subsequently the birth town of six Dukes of Alburquerque. The  
Gilded Age of Cuéllar ended in the 17th century, after the departure  
of the Court and of the Dukes of Alburquerque to Madrid.
The castle of Cuéllar, mentioned for the first time in 1306 and known as the Castle of the Dukes of Alburquerque, was registered in 1931 as a National Artistic Monument, together with the neighbouring St. Martin church housing today the Mudéjar Art Interpretation Center. The castle was described by the writer José de Espronceda, exiled in Cuéllar in 1833, in his historical novel Sancho Saldaña o el castellano de Cuéllar. The castle is located inside a citadel surrounded by wall mentioned for the first time in 1264 and built from the 12th to the 16th century. Of the original 2,000 m of walls, some 1,300 m have been preserved from destruction, including the St. Basil, St. James, St. Martin and St. Andrew arched gates.
The Cuéllar encierros (bull release in the town's streets) have been registered on 30 June 2008 as a Festival of National Tourist Interest. They are considered as the oldest in Spain, based on the acts of a synod conveyed in 1215 by the Bishop of Segovia to regulate the life of priests, who were forbidden to attend the "bulls' games". The encierros were prescribed by Law No. 17 of the Ordinances granted to Cuéllar in 1499 by Francisco Fernández de la Cueva, the second Duke of Alburquerque.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
The flag (photo, photo, Town Hall) and arms of Cuéllar (municipal website) are prescribed by a Decree adopted on 26  
September 2008 by the Municipal Council, signed on 4 December 2008 by  
the Mayor, and published on 15 December 2008 in the official gazette  
of Castilla y León, No. 241, p. 25,500 (text).
The symbols are described
as follows:
Flag: Of purpure color, with proportions 2:3. In the middle the municipal coat of arms, surmounted by the Royal open crown of Castile, in its proper colors.
Coat of arms: In Spanish shape. Argent, a horse's head and upper bust or fileted sable harnessed or and sable. The shield surmounted by the Royal open crown of Castile.
Félix J. Martínez Llorente (memoir released on 25 May 2008) proposed to officially adopt the flag already in use, purple with the re-designed municipal coat of arms.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
The coat of arms is a "rehabilitation" of the arms of the town known since the first half of the 15th century. Commissioned by the Mayor of Cuéllar, F&ecaute;Žlix J. Martínez Llorente listed the heraldic flaws in the arms currently used by the municipality and proposed solutions to correct them (preliminary report dated 29 October 2007). Martínez Llorente released on 25 May 2008 the memoir supporting the proposal of "rehabilitation" and "rectification" of the arms and banner of Cuéllar (which also included a flag proposal).
In a letter to the Governor of the Province of Segovia, dated 22  
September 1876, the Mayor of Cuéllar stated that no historical  
evidence of the authenticity and historicity of the arms with the  
horse's heads were found in the archives. Specifically, nothing was  
found to support the local tradition claiming that the arms are of  
Roman origin. The arms appear on the main gate of the town's castle;  
therefore the Mayor recommended to search in the archives of the Duke  
of Sexto, Marquis of Cuéllar and owner of the castle. Due to the lack  
of relevant sources, the representation of the arms in the town never  
complied with the rules of heraldry.
Rodrigo Méndez Silva (Población general de España,..., 1645) simply  
writes that Cuéllar "has for arms a horse's head cut at the breast".
  
The first elaborated description of the arms of the town is given by  
Antonio de Moya (Rasgo heroyco. Declaración de las empresas, armas y  
blasones..., 1756), who explains that the arms are a metaphoric  
representation of the seizure of the town, "beheaded" by the Romans.
  
Diego de Colmenares (Historia de la insigne ciudad de Segovia...,  
1637) indeed identified Cuéllar with the Celtiberian town of Colenda,  
mentioned by the Greek historian Appian of Alexandria; however, this  
theory was consistently rejected by later scholars (for instance,  
Gonzalo de Torre de Trassierra, Cuéllar, 1996).
An alternative explanation of the arms, equally unsupported by any  
historical reference, was studied by Juan Carlos Llorente Mínguez and  
Ángel Delgado Moreno (En torno a la heráldica cuellarana, 1990). The  
arms with the horse's head would have been granted to Cuéllar by the  
king of Castile to recall an "historical" event that happened during  
the siege of the town by Al-Mansur (997). About to surrender, the  
defenders of the town attracted Al-Mansur into an ambush, expecting to  
kill him by pulling down the portcullis on his head; unfortunately,  
they missed the target and beheaded Al-Mansur's horse instead. Upset,  
Al-Mansur seized the town and slaughtered all its inhabitants.
The oldest representations of the arms found in the town, however, are  
not older than the second half of the 15th century. All these arms  
show the head, neck (cuello) and breast of a horse, equipped with  
reins, mouthbit and harness. However, all the representations  
highlight the horse's neck, represented bigger as usual and placed in  
the center of the charge. Accordingly, Martínez Llorente believes that  
this particular charge was selected to make the arms canting, as it  
happened in several other places in Castile. The canting hypotheses  
was proposed for the first time in 1951 by Juan de Vera and Luis  
Felipe de Peñalosa, when the coat of arms of Segovia Province was  
designed; the authors referred to collera, a leather or wool collar,  
rather than  the horse's neck.
The identification of the original tinctures of the arms of Cuéllar is  
tricky. The oldest, indirect clue is given by Francisco Piferrer  
(Nobiliario de los Reinos..., Vol. 6, 1860): plate CXIX shows the  
arms as "Argent a horse's head or". A colour representation of the  
municipal arms is found on a Gothic keystone of the chapel of the La  
Magdalena hospital; while the hospital was founded in 1429, the  
painting most probably dates back to the 17th century. The shield is  
divided per bend sinister, dexter gules and sinister argent, charged  
with a horse's upper bust argent and or (mane) with reins sable. The  
shield is not crowned but surrounded by leaves or. During the  
restoration made in the 1980s, several paintings were found on the  
walls of the chapel; one of them, captioned "... 1675" shows two coats  
of arms affronty, with the tinctures of the shield reverted (divided  
argent and gules) and the horse's head represented proper (here, chestnut  
brown). Moreover, the coat of arms shown on the left, for the sake of  
symmetry, is divided per bend, the horse watching sinister. Oddly  
enough, this new position of the horse's head was subsequently  
favoured in several representations of the arms, all along the 19th  
century (clock tower of the Town Hall, fountains, for example).
On 24 August 1991, Alfonso Ceballos-Escalera y Gila, Chronicler of  
Arms of Castilla y León, commissioned by the Municipal Council,  
certified the arms of Cuéllar as designed by Juan de Vera and Luis  
Felipe de Peñalosa for the coat of arms of the Segovia Province,  
"Argent a horse's head proper with reins and cut at the breast. The  
shield surmounted by a Duke's coronet.
Martínez Llorente objected to the use of "proper", as an "heraldic  
oddity", to be replaced by "or" or "sable". He proposed to shows the  
horse's head "or fimbriated sable" to avoid the forbidden combination  
"or on sable"; the harness should be sable, too. Martínez Llorente  
further objected to the use of a Duke's coronet, which should be  
changed to the Royal Spanish crown, following the recommendation of  
the Royal Academy of History. In the particular case of Cuéllar,  
referring to the history of the town and to the traditional  
representations of its arms, Martínez Llorente  proposed to use a  
Royal crown open, or crown of Castile, as shown on the arms of Castilla  
y León. He further agreed with Ceballos-Escalera to keep the field  
of the shield argent, claiming that the historical variants divided  
per bend sinister are oddities, unusual in the Castilian heraldic  
tradition.
The model for the representation of the horse's head is the stone coat  
of arms found on the San Andrés gate - not the oldest design but the  
most harmonious.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
Flag proposed by A. Ceballos-Escalera y Gila - Image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
On 24 August 1991, Alfonso Ceballos-Escalera y Gila, Chronicler of Arms of Castilla y León, commissioned by the Municipal Council, certified the arms of Cuéllar as designed by Juan de Vera and Luis Felipe de Peñalosa for the coat of arms of Segovia Province, also including a proposed "quadrangular rectangular flag, made of a red panel with, in the middle, the municipal coat of arms in full colours". Martínez Llorente believes that purple is more appropriate than red, being the colour of the traditional banner (pendón) granted by the king to the Cuéllar Council.
Flag proposed by F. Martínez Llorente - Image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
Martínez Llorente made an alternative proposal, "Flag diagonally  
divided from upper left to lower right corner, in proportions 2:3.  
Gules (or red) at hoist, argent (or white) at fly. In the middle is  
placed the municipal coat of arms, surmounted by a Royal crown open of  
Castile in full colours".
The proposal is a banner of the municipal arms represented in the  
chapel of the La Magdalena hospital.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2014
Arroyo de Cuéllar
The former municipality of Arroyo de Cuéllar was incorporated to Cuéllar by Decree No. 3,746 of 19 December 1970, and established as a submunicipal entity by Royal Decree No. 1,827, adopted on 2 July 1976 and published on 30 July 1976 in the Spanish official gazette No. 182, p. 14,758 (text).
The flag and arms of Arroyo de Cuéllar, approved on 6 September 2001 by the Village Council, are prescribed by a Decree adopted on 24 
October 2001 by the Village Council, signed the same day by the Mayor, 
and published on 10 December 2001 in the official gazette of Castilla 
y León, No. 238, pp. 18,097-18,098 (text).
The symbols, which were designed by the Instituto Borbone de Heráldica Municipal, are described as follows:
Flag: Quadrangular, in proportions 1:1. Red with an horizontal stripe of 1/3 in height, itself divided into three parts, white, blue and white. In the center is placed the coat of arms of the municipality.
Coat of arms: Per pale, 1. Argent five pines vert per saltire in base waves argent and azure. 2. Or two pallets gules grafted in base argent a dragon vert a bordure gules eight saltires or [Crown not mentioned].
Ivan Sache, 10 February 2015
Chatún
Flag of Chatún - Image by Ivan Sache, 16 May 2021
The former municipality of Chatún (248 inhabitants in 2018) was incorporated to Cuéllar by Decree No. 3,746 issued in 19 December 1970 by the Spanish Government and published on 9 January 1971 in the Spanish official gazette, No. 8, p. 343 (text).
The flag and arms of Chatún are prescribed by an Agreement adopted on 24 September 2020 by the Village Council, signed on 25 November 2020 by the Mayor, and published on 2 December 2020 in the official gazette of Castilla y León, No. 250, p. 50,348 (text).
The symbols, which were validated by the Chronicler of Arms of Castilla y León, are described as follows.
Flag: Quadrangular panel, in proportions 1:1. Yellow with a green saltire whose arm's height is 1/8 the panel's side. Superimposed in the center with the municipal coat of arms in full colors.
Coat of arms: Per pale, 1a. Argent a saltire gules, 1b. Or five fesses vert, 2. Or two pallets gules grafted in base argent a dragon vert a bordure gules eight saltires or. [Crown not mentioned].
The colors of the flag symbolize agriculture, also represented in the second quarter of the arms as crop lines. The saltire represents St. Andrew, the village's patron saint, also represented in the first quarter of the arms. The third quarter features the arms of the Dukes of Alburquerque, once lords of the village.
[Press release, 10 December 2020]
Ivan Sache, 16 May 2021